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Bringing The Think Tanks Into The Court Room.
The Establishment of the Andean Court of Justice and the Action of
Professional Networks.
Workshop on Regional Integration University of Bamberg
Osvaldo Saldías
Abstract .
Legal transplants have traditionally been believed to be the product of reason and informed
decision-making that follow arduous deliberations and bargaining between lawmakers. This
paper argues that some major legal transformations can be better explained with the help of
networks. It delves into the history of the establishment of the Andean Court of Justice and
asks who got to decide the major questions in regard to the institutional design of the court. I
argue that contrary to dominant assumptions, consultants and think tanks play a decisive role
in the shaping of legal transplant. They are the ones that decide which model to follow. They
get to choose participants in relevant working groups, and it is them who shape the final
proposal that will be voted by the lawmaker. As the complexity of the topic increases,
scrutiny becomes unlikely.
In addition, the research shows that the personal background of consultants is very relevant
too, because it determines what models will be considered for eventual benchmarking.
Strategies for law reform are cost-avoiding and are therefore unlikely to favor novelties or
innovation.
1
INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................................................................ 2
I. IMMANENT LIMITATIONS OF THE TRANSPLANT APPROACH ............................................................. 3
THE COMPLEMENTARITY OF NETWORK APPROACHES. .............................................................................................. 4
II. TRANSPLANTING THE EUROPEAN COURT OF JUSTICE INTO THE ANDEAN COMMUNITY...... 7
BACKGROUND............................................................................................................................................................ 7
BRINGING THE THINK TANKS IN. ................................................................................................................................ 8
CHALLENGING EXPLANATIONS BASED ON DELIBERATION....................................................................................... 13
BRINGING THE JUDGES INTO THE NETWORK ............................................................................................................ 14
FOLLOW UP. THE TRANS-REGIONAL NETWORKS TODAY. ....................................................................................... 19
CONCLUSION........................................................................................................................................................... 21
REFERENCES........................................................................................................................................................... 22
INTRODUCTION
It is no secret that most legal reforms have borrowed much of other legal systems. It is a
mystery though, how these processes come about. In other words, we do not know who gets
to decide what solution, and from where it should be taken. The case of the Andean
Community and the transplantation of the European Court of Justice along with the whole
judicial system raise these kind of questions. This paper tries to challenge the assumption that
the choice for a particular legal or polity design is rationally driven, as most of the legal
scholarship would tend to believe. Instead, wherever we see a legal transplant, we will see
silent but efficient networks sharing knowledge in order to influence decision makers. In
this research I look for empirical evidence that is capable to answer those questions. I argue
that networks analysis offers an explanation of legal transformation that is more convincing
than legal assumption based on “wisdom coming down from the Olympus”. Furthermore, I
challenge explanations that claim that major law reform like legal transplants are the product
of deliberation and rational decision-making. The evidence confirm a claim made by network
scholars: problems that are highly complex tend to be solved by mimetic adoption of foreign
solution. The search for the model is determined not by legitimacy, but by personal linkages
within a network. In addition, complex solutions tend to be subject of low scrutiny, which
underpins the possibility of mimetic solutions.
The article is divided in two main parts. Part I will establish a theoretical framework that I
will use in the empirical part. The framework bases on network theories and advocacy
2
coalitions. I also resort to insights provided by organization theories. The whole frame lies
under the umbrella of the legal transplant approach, because I am deliberately looking for the
social phenomena that come with law transfers and ways to increase our understanding of
legal reform. I therefore briefly address the difficulties that legal scholarship has encountered
in explaining the outcomes of legal transplants. Those shortcomings are precisely the
motivation for digging into the empirical part of transplants. Part II will delve into the case of
the Andean Court of Justice and the massive borrowing of the EC’s judicial system. I trace
the networks that emerge around the ACJ and that maintain explicit links to the EU. These are
documented in protocol, publications and official decisions.
I. Immanent Limitations of the Transplant Approach
The term “legal transplant” has been among us for some time and has sparked interesting
discussion.1 However, we still don’t know what it means exactly. On one hand, legal scholars
seem to have quite different understandings of what a legal transplant is. Current theories on
legal transplants have stressed the diffusion of law, principles, and societal beliefs from one
legal system to another (Watson 1993; Horwitz 2009). On the other hand, the theoretical
robustness of the legal transplant approach has been severely contested (Legrand 1997; cf.
Watson 2000). In addition, the legal transplant approach is struggling with its apparent
inability to explain the broad range of disparate results that can be found among various
attempts throughout the history of this kind of operation. In other words, transplanting a well
functioning legal order into another does not guarantee that the same desired legal outcome
will be achieved in the new system. Faced with such a challenge, some scholars have
suggested that certain legal traditions –or legal families— have immanent qualities that
determine or predict adaptation in a new environment; the assertion that Common Law
systems are better suited for higher levels of legality after transplantation than Civil Law
systems has been recurrent (e.g. La Porta et al. 1998; Mahoney 2001). In addition, recent
attempts have also tried to link the performance of legal transplants with the relative ability of
the recipient legal community to internalize the rules, principles, and values of the donor
system (Berkowitz et al. 2003: 179). It is thereby assumed that successful internalization of
new norms depends on the inherent abilities of either the donor –also called origin– or the
recipient legal order. Moreover, these theories share the assumption that the only interaction
1 For instance, the last volume (July) of Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2009) is “made up of studies of histories of legal transplantations”.
3
that takes place occurs among legal systems. So far, there has not been an explanation on how
this transfer of norms occurs, and who the relevant actors are. Neither has there been
empirical work on the conditions that lead to effective transplantation.2
Political scientists, in addition, are increasingly including the study of legal transplants
in their research agendas, especially as a dimension of policy transfer and norm diffusion (see
for instance Börzel and Risse 2009). In this sense, legal transplants can be assessed from
different perspectives. One possibility is to focus on structures and how they are adopted in
different settings (DiMaggio and Powell 1983). Another possibility is to focus on the agency
that the phenomenon of transplantation is associated with. Agents of transplantations are
frequently legal experts that advocate for the transplantation of well functioning legal
systems, and swarm developing countries with constitutions, codes, statutes, and regulations
(cf. Berkowitz et al. 2003: 164; also “entrepreneurial transplants” in Likhovski 2009: 621).
Since the mechanisms as well as the conditions that make them possible have not been
researched empirically yet, the legal transplant approach is (still) very limited. Nevertheless, it
has the virtue of representing a particular mode of diffusion of norms and institutions.
Medical surgeons and horticulturists understand that transplantation takes place when a
complete organ is removed from its original natural site and transferred to a new position in a
separate individual. This perspective narrows the approach to norm transfer where the
transplant has to perform the same role or produce an identical outcome. It resembles the
institutional isomorphism perspective offered by organizational theory, but it contains a
strong normative aspiration: since the donor is a well-functioning system, transplantations
imply that success will result in a healthy and flourishing graft.3 It is precisely this
connotation that I will use in what follows. However, I do not want imply that other uses of
the concept of legal transplant are inadmissible.
The Complementarity of Network Approaches.
2 Save the case, of course, of Imperial expansion. 3 Cf. “transplant”, in Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved June 07, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online:
) http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/603059/transplant
4
The network approach is especially apt for complementing the analysis of legal transplants as
it overcomes the frequent juridical assumption that law –and law alone– shapes reality. It is a
truism though, to say that the emergence, and diffusion of laws depends on reasons other than
pure normative criteria.
I claim that network analysis can contribute to the understanding of legal transplants,
to its emergence, its implementation, and its evaluation, because it can causally link actors
and facts that precede the outcome. This linkage between actors and events can replace
normative assumptions that the law comes from “the heights of the Olympus”. Hence, my
approach starts form the assumption that the existence, incorporation, and performance of
legal norms depend not only on the law itself, but also on a variety of actors that participate in
the legal process at different stages. These actors are interested in the outcome of transplants
and interact in patterns that are more complex than legal theorists would assume. The
transplantation process originates a multitude of coordinated action and interdependencies of
a wide array of types, and pushes existing typologies to their limits (for a review of the
different policy network concepts, see Börzel 1997). In this article, actors involved have an
interest in a given outcome of legal transplants and join in legal networks. The kind of
network that I deem relevant for this research are brought together by an episteme (Ruggie
1975; Haas 1992) and/or shared belief about norms and institutions (Jenkins-Smith and
Sabatier 1994; Zafonte and Sabatier 1998). The story of the Andean Community and its Court
of Justice points to those networks and communities that share a common vision about how
regional integration can and should be attained.
Scholars have focused on the behavior of such networks and the patterns of
coordination. The starting point therefore is the identification of the element that brings them
together and keep them cooperating: the “glue” (Zafonte and Sabatier 1998: 477). This glue
can consist of policies and normative cores, an episteme (Haas 1992: 2), or a common
academic or professional socialization (DiMaggio and Powell 1983: 152, 3). Furthermore,
socialization among members of the network plays a distinctive role too. The process of legal
change and bureaucratization is channeled through the legal profession where their members
act as rationalizers and push towards homogenization of the epistemic field (DiMaggio and
Powell 1983: 147). This is especially true for newcomers, who usually face “liability for their
newness” (DiMaggio and Powell 1983: 156).
It has been suggested that the ways in which states and organizations identify their
problems and try to solve them are functions of how problems are understood by policy-
5
makers themselves or by whom they turn for advice. The logic of epistemic policy
coordination, then relies on the initial uncertainty on how to solve problems; uncertainty is
likely to become more salient as complexity of issues rises (Haas 1992: 3, 12).4 By
identifying the problems and proposing solutions, epistemic communities can influence
policy-making. At the same time however, the stimulus for adopting solutions that already
exist elsewhere is very strong when policy-makers face unclear causes for their predicaments.
When facing the challenge of ambiguous solutions, “problemistic search may yield a viable
solution with little expense” (DiMaggio and Powell 1983: 151; Cyert and March 1963)5.
An alternative reason for mimetic action relates to expectations of legitimacy gain.
Organization theory suggests that [o]rganizations tend to model themselves after similar
organizations in their field that they perceive to be more legitimate or successful” (DiMaggio
and Powell 1983: 152). Consistent with our network approach, members of epistemic
networks will advocate for the implementation of solutions found in successful organizations
primarily because there is more information available, there are more resources, and because
it provides increased legitimacy. According to DiMaggio and Powell, uncertainty only
exacerbates such pressure; hence their hypothesis reads “the more uncertain the relationship
between means and ends the greater the extent to which an organization will model itself after
organizations it perceives to be successful” (DiMaggio and Powell 1983: 154; Zucker 1987:
443). The modeling that takes place begins with formal structures that are emulated.
Experts or scientists tend to present information based on technical knowledge as
neutral and subject to scientific scrutiny only. However, it has been suggested that members
of epistemic communities have preferences too; Jenkins-Smith and Sabatier contend that
technical information and formal policy analysis are generally used in an advocacy fashion
(Jenkins-Smith and Sabatier 1994: 191). Accordingly, members of epistemic networks pursue
the fulfillment of a unified plan or the attainment of common goals. How they coordinate for
this purpose can vary. In a pattern of strong coordination, networked coalitions will (1)
develop a common plan; (2) communicate the plan to the peers; and (3) accept and implement
the plan; whereas in a pattern of weak coordination “organizational actors monitor each
other’s political behavior, and then alter their actions to make their political strategies
complementary with respect to a common goal” (Zafonte and Sabatier 1998: 480). The latter
kind occurs when some actors within the network have superior information or political
4 “Poorly understood conditions may create enough turbulence that established operating procedures may break down, making institutions unworkable. Neither power nor institutional cues to behavior will be available, and new patterns of action may ensue” (Haas 1992: 14). 5 Elsewhere I have discussed the implication of this strategy for comparative legal scholarship (Saldías 2008)
6
resources on the particular problem, driving the rest to “follow the leader” (Zafonte and
Sabatier 1998: 480).
II. TRANSPLANTING THE EUROPEAN COURT OF JUSTICE INTO THE ANDEAN COMMUNITY
Background
In May 26th 1969, the Andean states Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru signed the
Cartagen Agrement, widely known as the “Andean Pact”.6 By the end of the 70’s, the main
problem was that Andean Pact law could not achieve its intended purpose of establishing a
common market, due to endemic non-compliance of community rues, especially those
establishing deadlines for the dismantling of trade barriers (JUNAC 1979: 12, 84; Hurtado
Larrea 1985: 72-3; JUNAC 1983; Perotti 1999: 193). Goals that had been set in the founding
Treaty of the Andean Pact –the Cartagena Agreement–, were not achieved.
Inn the late 1970s and 1980s, the process of regional integration in South America was
reinvigorated. The Southern Common Market MERCOSUR was established,7 and the
Andean Pact was reformed. Later in time, in 1979, the Andean main intergovernmental and
legislative body, the Commission, approved a proposal for the establishment of a
supranational Court of Justice in the image of the ECJ.8 This meant that EC law and EC
judicial remedies were to be transplanted into the Andean Pact in one of the most striking
action of legal diffusion in the history of South American republics.
It is precisely at this point where most of the scholarship on the Andean Court of
Justice begins.9 The establishment of the Court is often presented in the literature as a fait
accompli, which does not need further elaboration about the process of legal reform.
However, the fact that a rather controversial judicial institution like the ECJ could be
6 Chile withdrew on October 30th, 1976, and Venezuela joined in February 13th 1973 only to withdraw again in 2006. 7 The EC-inspired Andean System of Integration was established on March 10th by the Trujillo Protocol. It is important to note that the Andean Pact was renamed Andean Community. MERCOSUR was established by the Treaty of Asunción on March 26th 1991. 8 For a thorough overview of the legal and institutional reform that transformed the Andean Pact into the Andean Community, see (Marwege 1995) 9 Just as an example of noted work on the subject: (Andueza 1986; da Cruz Vilaça and Sobrino 1996; Ekmekdjian 1994; Sáchica 1985a; Suárez Mejías 2001; Tangarife 2001)
7
transplanted with so little mutations is a development that has not been subject to sufficient
research. Scholars of regional integration should have noticed that such phenomena are not
necessarily natural to international organizations, at the latest when ASEAN explicitly
rejected following a European way of regional integration.
The next part will examine these reforms with the creation of the Andean Court of
Justice as a case in point. With the help of the network approach, I will show that the design
of this institution has less to do with deliberation and a conscious rational decision, than with
the academic background and personal linkages found in the participants of this process.
Bringing the think tanks in.
In 1972, the Andean Commission –the organization’s major decision-making body–
had established the necessity of creating a dispute settlement body. This decision was made
based on functional requirements that pointed toward solving problems of non-compliance. It
instructed the Junta, to a great extent the Andean executive organ, to present a report
(henceforward “the report”) with a recommendation on this matter.10 The Junta finished the
report that same year and presented its conclusion in December 11.11 A final proposal though,
was presented to the Commission for formal approval only in 1977 (“the proposal”).
The Junta conducted its research with significant assistance from the Institute for the
Integration of Latin America and the Caribbean (INTAL) established by the Inter-American
Development Bank in 1965. INTAL’s headquarters are located in Buenos Aires, and its
mission is “to promote and consolidate Latin American and Caribbean integration at the sub-
regional, regional, inter-regional, hemispheric and international levels”12. Among other tools,
the institute achieves this goal by means of technical assistance and capacity building
activities for the formulation and enforcement of integration policies. INTAL is also an agent
for dissemination of knowledge in the field of regional integration, with an explicit focus on
Europe. This was achieved by means of several periodicals that were published and financed
by the institute, notably Revista Integracion Latinoamericana, Derecho de la Integracion,
10 Sexto Período de Sesiones Extraordinarias. 11 Décimo Períod de Sesiones Extraordinarias de la Comisón. COM/X-E/dic. 5. 12 Taken from its mission statement available at <http://www.iadb.org/intal/detalle_articulo.asp?idioma=ENG&aid=490&cid=206&nivel=>
8
Revista de la Integracion, and the Serie Publicaciones INTAL.13 It is telling that
Ernst Haas
during the
time between the discussion and establishment of the Andean Court of Justice, the work of
distinguished international scholars was translated and published in INTAL’s periodicals, as
for instance: 14, Bela Balassa15, Joseph Nye16, Philippe Schmitter17, Maurice
Lagrange18, and Pierre Pescatore . Although the institution sees itself as an academic
research centre, it might very well be analyzed as a policy oriented institution with a clear
mandate that is not questioned nor scrutinized by its members. In other words, it has a clear
bias towards regional integration.
19
Following the Commission’s mandate, the Junta set up a working group (“the working
group”) that would meet several times within a short period of time. As I show in this
research, the participants to that group are very relevant to the outcome of the deliberations on
the ACJ and its establishment. Felix Peña was at that time a senior consultant at INTAL and
directed by that time the institute’s department for legal studies.20 Felix Peña’s academic
background is strongly tied to European studies and European legal integration. A born
Argentinean, he held a degree in European law in Leuven and had written his dissertation at
the Law School of the University of Madrid. In regard to European integration theorists, it is
worthy to note that he worked under supervision of Ernst Haas at the University of Berkeley
in 1973.21 During the time between 1966 and 1975, he directed the department of legal
studies of INTAL. Under his leadership, and before the working group started its task, the
INTAL periodical Derecho de la Integracion had published and translated articles of Maurice
Lagrange22 and Pierre Pescatore23. Furthermore, one of the Editorials in 1971 , although not 24
13 All of them ceased to be published. Revista Integracion Latinoamericana was published from 1976-1995, Derecho de la Integracion from 1967-1978, Revista de la Integracion from 1967-1975, Serie Publicaciones INTAL from 1964-1996. They were replaced by other periodicals that are equally devoted to the topic of regional integration, like for instance, Revista Integracion & Comercio, which saw the light in 1996. 14 Ernst Haas (1972) El estudio de la integracion regional: reflexiones acerca de la alegría y la angustia de pre-teorizar, Revista de la Integración N° 10 (Mayo 1972);; 15 Bela Balassa (1972) El segundo decenio para el desarrollo y la integración económica regional, Revista de la Integración N° 11 (Mayo 1972). . 16Joseph Nye, Integración regional comparada: concepto y medición; revista de la Integración N° 5, 50-86. 17 Philippe Schmitter, La dinámica de contradicciones y la conducción de crisis en la integración centroamericana, Revista de la Integración N° 5, 87-151. 18 Maurice Lagrange, La interpretación unitaria del derecho de las Comunidades Europeas: aspectos de la interpretación prejudicial, Derecho de la Integración N° 3 (Octubre 1968) 51-80. 19 Pierre Pescatore, Distribución de competenicas y de poderes entre los Estados miembros de las Comunidades Europeas, Derecho de la Integración N° 1 (Octubre 1967) 108-152. 20 Two years later he would become Director of INTAL and vice-manager (subgerente) of Integration at the Inter-American Development Bank. 21 All information taken from his CV available online at <http://www.felixpena.com.ar/index.php?contenido=trayectoria> 22 “La interpretación unitaria del derecho de las Comunidades Europeas: aspectos de la interpretación prejudicial”, Derecho de la Integración N° 3 (Octubre 1968), 59-80
9
signed by Peña, sets the foundations for the document that would be incorporated into the
Junta’s final report for the Commission.
It was planned for the report to include different elements. First, experts’ opinions
were commissioned for two core issues. One related to the regional dimension of law and the
judiciary and was assumed by INTAL scholars. Felix Peña himself delivered an opinion on
alternatives for a dispute settlement system within an integration scheme, and a second
opinion on the need of legal control of Andean administrative acts was prepared by Francisco
Kramer Villagran. Villagran was part of the INTAL team too; prior to the assignment he had
written in Derecho de la Integracion on legal instrument of Central American integration25.
The third INTAL consultant was Felipe Paolillo, a scholar from University of Montevideo,
who had equally presence in the journal.26 Furthermore, national specialists from each
member states briefed the Junta about the validity of rulings and awards of international
tribunals within their national legal traditions. Among these national experts were Jacobo
Schaulson from Chile and Jaime Vidal Perdomo from Colombia. Having collected the
material, the Junta called for an experts’ meeting on June 23 , 1972, bringing together all the
authors mentioned above. In addition, two European officials were invited to that summit, in
order to provide insights from the European experience.
27
rd
The European Commission’s acting
director of the Legal Service Gerard Olivier, as well as ECJ judge Pierre Pescatore (Marwege
1995: 71-2), together with the scholars that had delivered the opinions and the briefings.
The report also includes the content of a conference organized by the Secretariat of
Central American Common Market on the issue “dispute settlement in integration
arrangements”, were representatives of the Junta converged with experts like Walter Much,
General Director of the European Commission’s Legal Service, as well as Maurice Lagrange,
General Advocate of the ECJ; in addition, the report notes that two representatives of the
Junta were invited to Luxembourg and Brussels in order to gain insights on the functioning of
the ECJ and its legal system (JUNAC 1972: 135).
23 “Distribución de competencias y de poderes entre los Estados miembros de las Comunidades Europeas: estudio de las relaciones entre las Comunidades y los Estados miembros”, Revista Derecho de la Integración N° 1(Octubre 1967). This was the same year, Pescatore received his appointment as a judge to the European Court of Justice. 24 “La idea de conflicto y el ordenamiento jurídico e institucional de la integración económica” Revista de la Integración N° 8 (Abril 1971), 5-6. 25 “Los instrumentos legales de la integracion economica centroamericana”, Derecho de la Integracion N° 3 (Octubre 1968), 36-58. 26 “Reparticion de competencies y poderes entre la ALALC y los Estados miembros”, Derecho de la Integracion N° 2 (Abril 1968), 20-49 27 Also attending that particular meeting: Renato Crespo (Bolivia), Ramiro Borja y Borja (Ecuador), and Hector Cornejo Chavez (Peru).
10
All over the text of the report, short references are made to the individual contribution
of the participants, with the aim of converging to one major policy recommendation. Those
contributions were also collected and published by INTAL in two issues of Derecho de la
Integracion.
An examination of all contributions suggests that it was not intended by the working
group to design a new dispute settlement mechanism for the Andean Pact. It was rather a
preliminary introduction of five proto-types that appeared as possible candidates, namely
ALALC, MCCA, EC, ECOWAS, and GATT. However, the report is strongly biased in favor
of the European Court of Justice. The INTAL consultants make constant references to the
European experience, not few are laudatory remarks.28 Conversely, references to the system
of ALALC are tainted with a rather skeptical tone,29 not least because it was the model that
was being questioned. It seems that Felix Peña’s argument shapes the entire reading of the
report. In his contribution, he makes an abstract claim that integrations schemes are to be
classified into complex and non-complex systems. It follows, that non-complex integrations
schemes may use less institutionalized dispute settlement mechanisms like mediation.
Conversely, complex arrangements should have highly institutionalized jurisdictional bodies.
Although Peña refrains from making a bold personal policy recommendation, it is quite clear
what he meant, because the Andean pact –and its successor the Andean Community- had been
claiming to be one of the most sophisticated systems next to the European Community. That
Peña’s typology permeated the whole report can be upheld not least because he was the
designated director of the working group.
Therefore, the outcome of the reports comes at no surprise. The Junta presents a
blueprint for a court, armored with procedures of nullification, non-compliance, and
preliminary rulings; all three procedures flanked by the doctrine of supremacy of
supranational law (JUNAC 1973: 139, 49, 50)30. The report is formally approved by the
Commission in December 1972, and the protocol of the main meeting31 records a brief
passage referring to a “wide exchange of opinions” that supposedly took place, followed by
28 See e.g. (INTAL 1972: 123, 6), also (JUNAC 1973: 139, 40, 41, 46) 29 “El sistema de solucion de controversias establecido en la ALALC no satisface los requisitos que acabamos de apuntar” (JUNAC 1973: 144) 30 It is interesting to note that the paragraph that justifies the need for Andean law’s supremacy over domestic law, quotes “the president of the European Court of Justice”-by that time Robert Lecourt. 31 Decimo Periodo de Sesiones Extraordinarias de la Comision, COM/XE-acta final 1972; I am grateful to Mrs. Zoila Choque Domenique, Documentation Centre of the Andean Community, for her helping me accessing these rare documents.
11
the expression of “satisfaction on how the Junta has been conducting its work”.32 As a
corollary, the Junta agreed to present a final proposal and to assist member states in the task
of diffusing and explaining the meaning of its report.
The fact the INTAL-Junta network was very aware of the importance of diffusion can
be inferred from its regional activities. After the sessions in Lima and City of Guatemala,33
several meetings were organized with Andean key actors in order to diffuse the content of the
report.
Between October 28 and November 5 of 1972, with occasion of the Lawyer’s
Congress of the Andean Group, Felipe Salazar Santos, coordinator of the Junta and one of the
drafters of the report, was in charge of presenting the draft and reaffirming the need for an
Andean judicial organ before the legal community (Salazar Santos 1973). The congress
focused on issues related to “integration law”, the role of lawyers in the integration process,
and of course the establishment of a jurisdictional organ for the Cartagena Agreement
(INTAL 1973b: 179). Only few days later, in November 20-24, INTAL sponsored a seminar
at a Colombian University, the Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Senora del Rosario. The topic
hinged around “Legal aspects of economic integration” and the presentations focused on the
new Andean legal system, and the European experience with its Court of Justice. Among the
Andean presenters, noted participants of the working group: Felipe Salazar Santos and
Gustavo Fernandez Saavedra, both Junta officials, Felix Peña and Francisco Villagran from
INTAL, Jacobo Schaulson and Jaime Vidal Perdomo who had represented Chile and
Colombia in the initial meeting; and finally, presenting the European experience: Jean Victor
Louis, professor for European at Brussels University, and Michel Gaudet, former director of
the EC’s Legal Service (INTAL 1973a: 178).
Between 1973 and 1979, INTAL consistently used its periodicals for the diffusion of
the ACJ project and the convenience of legal integration. This was made especially through
the journal Derecho de la Integración34, and penned by the members of the network. Notably
Pierre Pescatore35, Francisco Orrego Vicuña36, Felipe Salazar37 Felix Peña38. In addition, the
32 Com/XE- acta final, 1972, p. 3 “La presentación del informe dio lugar a un amplio intercambio de opiniones de carácter preliminar, que permitió a la Junta dar explicaciones adicionales sobre el proyecto de bases de tratado que ha elaborado y escuchar las reacciones iniciales de las Representaciones en torno a este tema. Las Representaciones reiteraron la importancia de contra en la Subregión con un instrumento de esta naturaleza y su conformidad con la manera en que la Junta viene desarrollando estos trabajos.” (Emphasis added). 33 See pages 10 & 11 34 Editorial (1975) El aporte del derecho económico al derecho de la integración. Derecho de la integración N° 18-19 (Marzo/Julio), p. 5-7. 35 Pescatore, Pierre (1973) Derecho de la integración: Nuevo fenómeno en las relaciones internacionales, Publicaciones INTAL 74, Buenos Aires. Ibid (1974) La importancia del derecho en un proceso de integración
12
journal started a series containing relevant rulings of the ECJ39. This effort of diffusion has
not many parallels in the history of international organizations in the region.40
Challenging Explanations based on Deliberation
In 1997 the Junta’s final report was presented as a formal proposal to be adopted by the
Andean Commission. It becomes difficult to gauge the exact developments in those meetings
and sessions. There are rare accounts of them. Some of them suggest that the proposal
unfolded rounds of deep discussion, followed by hard bargaining and deliberation. Among the
town criers of this position is founding judge Carlos Sáchica. He describes the negotiation as
follows:
“The negotiation was slow. Many meetings of experts coming from member states tweaked
the original proposal, and along lengthy debates it acquired the tenets that distinguish the
Courts from its undeniable model: the Court of Justice of the European Communities”
(Sáchica 1985a: 13)41
Another account consistent with the deliberation approach is Zelada Castedo, who
explains the long time that was necessary to approve the statutes for the ACJ, this is, eight
económica. Derecho de la Integración N° 15 (Marzo), p. 11-21. Also Pescatore (1974) Las exigencias de la democracia y la legitimidad de la Comunidad Europea. Derecho de la Integración N° 17 (Noviembre), p. 45-54. Ibid (1977) El ejecutivo comunitario: justificación del cuatripartismo instituido por los tratados de Paris y Roma. Derecho de la Integración N° 25-26 (Noviembre), p. 53-62. 36 Orrego Vicuña, Francisco (1974) La Creación de un tribunal de justicia en el Grupo Andino. Derecho de la Integración N° 15 (Marzo), p. 31-46. Ibid (1975) La adaptación de lo pactado a los cambios contextuales que inciden en un proceso de integración. Derecho de la Integración N° 20 (Noviembre), p. 37-46. Ibid (1977) Los presupuestos juridicos de un proceso de integración económica efectivo. Derecho de la Integración N° 24 (Marzo), p. 11-20 37 Salazar, Felipe (1978) Solución de conflictos en organizaciones interestatales para la integración económica y otras formas de cooperación económica. Derecho de la Integración N° 28-29 (Noviembre), p. 11-34. 38 Peña, Felix (1979) La experiencia institucional de la integración económica de América Latina. Integración Latinoamericana 6(64), P. 27-32 39 Corte Europea de Justicia (1976) CEE: sentencias de la Corte de Justicia. Derecho de la Integración N° 21 (Marzo), p. 190-222. Also (1976) CEC: sentencias de la Corte de Justicia (II parte) Derecho de la Integración N^22-23 (Julio-Noviembre), p. 120-153. Ibid (1977) Sentencias de la Corte (IV parte) Derecho de la Integración N °25-26 (Noviembre), p. 143-150. Ibid (1978) Sentencias de la Corte (V parte) Derecho de la Integración N° 27 (Marzo), p. 189-212. Ibid (1978) Sentencias de la Corte VI parte) Derecho de la Integración N° 28-29 (Noviembre), p. 162-168. 40 My claim contradicts Karen Alter’s account of the establishment of Andean jurisprudence. Alter suggests that in comparison with the European Court of Justice, there were no significant Andean Advocacy movement that could have underpinned ECJ-style case law. (Alter 2008). I argue that without significant networks, the ACJ would not have been transplanted in the first place. 41 “La negociación fue lenta. Varias reuniones de expertos de los países miembros perfeccionaron la propuesta original, y en los largos debates adquirió los matices que distinguen al Tribunal de su innegable modelo: la Corte de Justicia de las Comunidades Europeas.” (My own translation).
13
years, with the assumption that preliminary work as well as intergovernmental negotiations
that concluded with the Commission’s approval were especially profound, and the agreement
was the consequence not of improvisation, but of much reflection and consideration.42
However, in a later passage, Zelada Castedo admits that there had been a quick consensus
about the organization and competencies of the Court. Apparently any eventual changes
incorporated into the report’s proposal –especially those motivated by the member states-
were not substantial, calling into question whether the outcome was the product of such hard
deliberation.43 It seems rather an avowal of deliberation not necessarily backed by deeds.
As a matter of fact, the final proposal approved by the Commission included all the
features that the European Court of Justice became noted for: an annulment procedure, a non-
compliance procedure, a procedure of preliminary rulings, and the principle of direct
applicability of Andean law. In other words, the final outcome is consistent with the work of
the INTAL-Junta network, and there are not any significant changes that could bolster the
claim of an approval based on deliberation and bargaining. Rather, it seems to be, that the
final proposal’s approval in 1997, followed a similar path of the preliminary report in 1972: a
swift confirmation of what had been done by the Junta, with lip service being paid to an
image of hard negotiations and confrontation between national representatives. As a
consequence, a Treaty Establishing the Andean Court of Justice was signed in 1979, and
ratified by the last member states in 1983.44
Bringing the Judges into the Network
Scholars have recently been suggesting, that once established, the judges of the
Andean Court of Justice began explicitly resorting to case law of the ECJ in their own rulings,
as they incorporated doctrines of direct effect and supremacy of Andean law, by means of a
42 “El prolongado lapso transcurrido entre las primeras iniciativas y la suscripción del Tratado, autoriza a pensar que tanto los trabajos preliminares como las negociaciones intergubernamentales fueron amplios y profundos, y que el acuerdo final no fue resultado de la improvisación sino, mas bien de una larga reflexión.” (Zelada Castedo 1985: 127) 43 “Por lo visto, la concepción sobre la naturaleza, competencias y organización del órgano jurisdiccional propuesto, surgió relativamente pronto. A partir de la conclusión del citado informe y de las respectivas bases para un tratado preparadas por la Junta, o sea después de 1972, los trabajos posteriores se redujeron a un afinamiento de las ideas originales, después de confrontarlas, seguramente, con el pensamiento de los gobiernos. Las discrepancias entre este y aquellas, aparentemente, no fueron sustanciales, por lo cual habría que indagar por otro lado sobre las causas que dilataron el proceso de negociación y suscripción de Tratado” (Zelada Castedo 1985: 131) 44 That it took so long for this treaty to be ratified by the member states is convincingly explained by Marwege, based on the objection –at national level- of the Venezuelan Constitutional Court (Marwege 1995)
14
procedure of preliminary rulings.45 All these were institutions and concepts modeled on the
European Court of Justice, European case law, and the European procedure of preliminary
rulings46 The European legal vocabulary was adopted with the result of an isomorphic
technical jargon identical –formally at least!– to the EC’s.47
There are not many attempts to explain why a court would be so open to cross-
fertilization. Latin American legal scholars have justified this incorporation on normative
grounds, this is, these types of rulings are a natural legal development when supranational
courts begin their work. This means that every supranational court would tend automatically
to hand down similar rulings because it is immanent to supranational courts to follow the
compelling nature of community law (for a critique of such arguments, see Saldías 2008).
Karen Alter suggests another possibility: it was the personal engagement of a few
judges. She mentions one in particular, judge Galo Pico Mantilla, who was the president of
the Court when the doctrines of supremacy and direct effect were incorporated (Alter 2008:
26). Similarly, but in a general way, Anne-Marie Slaughter views processes of judicial cross-
fertilization as the product of judicial globalization. In her view, judges talk to each other in a
process of intellectual exchange and mutual learning that leads to courts using the ideas of
their peers (Slaughter 2000, 2003, 1998).
Evidence suggests though, that professional networks are far more relevant than
previously assumed. The incorporation of the ECJ’s core repertoire into Andean case law can
be traced back to the same network that procured its transplantation. This explanation is more
convincing than the fore mentioned views.
The initial cadre of Andean judges was appointed in January 1984, in a meeting that
took place in Quito (Gabaldón Márquez 1985: 111). Among the new magistrates, there was
Luis Carlos Sáchica, José Guillermo Andueza, Estuardo Hurtado Larrea, and the Court
Secretary Iván Gabaldón Márquez. The following year, in 1985, four of them were reunited
by INTAL, and under the lead of Alberto Zelada Castedo, the institute’s head of the legal
department, the first comprehensive monograph on the Andean Court of Justice was penned
45 By the time the Andean Court took on its activities, milestones of European case law were already in place, e.g. case 3/62 Commission v. Luxembourg [1963] ECR 445; case 26/62 Van Geld & Loos [1963] ECR 1; case 6/64 Costa ENEL [1964] ECR 585; case 6/72 Continental Can [1973] ECR 215; case 8/74 Dassonville [1974] ECR 837 46 Explicit references to European case law are made, e.g., in case 2-IP-88 citing the Costa v. ENEL, as well as Simmenthal, at page 2, and case 39/70 Norddeutsches Vieh- und Fleischkontor GmbH v Hauptzollamt Hamburg-St. Annen 1 of October 1974, [1974] ECR 899 at page 4. See ruling ACJ [TJCA] 2-IP-88, GOAC Nst ° 33, 26 of July1988 th
47 I discuss the differences between Andean and European case law elsewhere, as well as the implications for legal integration (Saldias 2009)
15
(BID-INTAL 1985). This coordinated work had the potential of massively influencing future
case law, as it was published in the time between the date of entry into force of the Treaty
establishing the Court (May 19th of 1983), and the first ruling in 1987.
In the introductory part of the monograph, INTAL’s director Juan Vacchino
acknowledges the importance of diffusing “the competencies, the organization, and
functioning of this organ”, as well as the close collaboration between the institute and the
Junta in the 1970s. (Vacchino 1985: 3). In the light of network analysis, there are two striking
aspects in regard to this work:
a) All articles explicitly refer to key aspects of Andean law that had been
discussed in the Junta’s final report. These community-enhancing features were direct effect
or applicability, supremacy, and the procedure of preliminary rulings. (Sáchica 1985a: 8, 13,
24; Andueza 1985a: 33, 41; Hurtado Larrea 1985: 70; Andueza 1985b: 97; Zelada Castedo
1985: 139). The content substantially reflects the ideas of the working group that prepared the
final report.
b) Key European authors, who were part of the working group, monopolize the
European scholarly influence. For the newly sworn-in Andean judges, they seem to represent
the gateway to European Community law. Pierre Pescatore, Jean Victor Louis, Maurice
Lagrange and Michel Gaudet become point of reference whenever the ECJ is used as object
of comparison (Andueza 1985a: 42, 5; Sáchica 1985b: 52; Andueza 1985b: 109; Zelada
Castedo 1985: 148, 56, 59).48
Following this publication, Andean judges continued diffusing the ideas on
supranational law and the newly established ACJ (e.g. Andueza 1986). There was plenty of
time for this preparatory phase, since it took the ACJ four years to hand down its first rulings,
allegedly due to an initial lack of cases.49 Although the number of articles or books published
by the judges was modest in comparison to the European workload, it had the particularity
that it was fully consistent with the project endeavored by the working group that assisted the
Junta. A comparison between the final report, and the work described so far, shows striking 48 To be sure, there are references to other European scholars who did not participate in the network, but these are scholars of constitutional and international law rather than European law; for instance, Hans Kelsen, Jorge Rodriguez Zapata, Henri Wagnon Charles Rousseau. The only exception is Jean de Richmond, whose work in French is cited by Andueza (Andueza 1985b: 99). 49 Karen Alter suggests that member states refused to authorize the Andean legal secretariat to proceed with cases (Alter 2008: 24)
16
similarity. Newcomers to the court, like Nicolás de Piérola, also continued the process of
diffusion (de Piérola 1987). In fact, de Pierola presided the Court when a noted ruling was
handed down, reaffirming the doctrines of supremacy in May 1988 (2-IP-88). A year earlier,
the doctrines had been incorporated in ruling 1-IP-87, when the court was presided by the
Ecuadorian judge Galo Pico Mantilla. Karen Alter rightly suggests, that it might have been
him, who penned that ruling. It is important to add, however, that Pico Mantilla had not been
neutral in regard to the process of establishment of the Court.
“A gentleman-lawyer who was once Secretary of the Minister of Industry and
Ambassador to Venezuela, Mantilla sought to emulate the European legal
integration strategy. Mantilla was committed to Andean integration as an end in
itself, having been a participant in negotiations involving Andean integration and in
the negotiations that led to the founding of the Andean Court” (Alter 2008: 26)
emphasis added.
Although Alter’s assessment of the contribution of Judge Pico Mantilla is very
plausible if the analysis starts with the first ruling, the doctrinal content related to supremacy
can be found earlier, namely in the working group on the establishment of the ACJ. The
Court does not acknowledge this explicitly, but in both rulings mentioned above, one can find
in the preliminary considerations50 cross references to EC-law when it comes to introduce the
issue of supremacy and direct effect51, as well as the method of teleological interpretation
within the procedure of preliminary rulings52
In sum, the network that worked on the transplantation of the ECJ into the Andean
region was far more relevant than scholars have previously thought. It is a small, dense web
of relations. Figure I illustrate this web. It is interesting to note the bi-polar tenets of the
network. This underscores the relevance of two members of the network: INTAL consultant
Felix Peña, and Junta official Alberto Zelada. 50 Known as considerandos in Spanish legal jargon. 51 “El Tribunal de Justicia de las Comunidades Europeas, en las sentencias antes citadas, ha afirmado la preeminencia absoluta del derecho comunitario sobre el interno, tesis que resulta ser tambien applicable en el ordenamiento juridico de la integracion andina conforme antes se indico.” Ruling 2-IP-88, p. 3 52 “En cuanto a los metodos de interpretacion que debe utilizar el Tribunal, ha de tenerse presente la realidad y caract6eristica esenciales del Nuevo Derecho de la Integracion y la importante contribucion que en esta material tiene ya acumulada la experiencia europea, sobre tod por el aporte de la jurisprudencia de la Corte de Justicia, Tribunal unico de las Comunidades Europeas en la aplicacion de este derecho ,que se esta haciendo constantemente en beneficio de la construccion comuntaira, sin perder de vista el fin permanente de la norma. Por estas consideraciones corresponde el empleo preferente de los metodos de interpretacion llamados “funcionales”, como los metodos sistemativos y de interpretacion teleological…”. ruling 1-IP-87, p. 5
17
FelixPeña
AlbertoZelada
Francisco Villagran
NicolasPiérola Ivan
Gabaldón
Estuardo Hurtado
Guillermo Andueza
Felipe Paolillo
FelipeSalazar
Maur. Lagrange
PierrePescatore
Jacobo Schaulson
Jaime Vidal Perdomo
Jean Victor Louis
WalterMuch
GustavoFernandez
MichelGaudet
Luis Sáchica
GerardOlivier
Ernst Haas
Fig. 1
Network based on documented meetings or collaboration.
18
Follow Up. The Trans-Regional Networks Today.
The network that laid the foundations for the establishment of the ACJ and its early work, had
a trans-regional reach. But admittedly, it was not a full-fledged epistemic community about
community law or regional integration. It was rather a professional advocacy coalition that
shared two convictions:
a) How to reform the Andean Pact, and
b) What model to follow
Having succeeded in establishing the ACJ according to the initial vision of INTAL
consultants, the networks still exist. The names of the people involved have changed though.
Just as at the beginnings, these networks share an answer to the fore mentioned questions:
how to improve the Andean Community, and what model should be followed. These are
unidirectional forces, this is, the European Community is accepted as a dictum for the Andean
Community to learn and evolve. No member of these networks would seriously teach
Europeans a lesson on community law even if there was valuable knowledge that could be
extracted from a sound comparison.
There are contemporary examples of this kind of unilateral or asymmetrical network. For
instance, in order to reinforce the value of European concepts in regard to regional
integration, conferences for the diffusion of best practices in the European legal field with
participation of European Commission and Andean member, like for instance the conference
“Integration and Supranationality” sponsored by the European Commission in Bolivia in 2001
(Comunidad Andina 2001).53 This conference was not supposed to result in a European
policy recommendation on how to advance regional integration through law, but rather as
benchmarking for Andean countries to take ideas.
Precisely because it primordially serves Andean needs, European legal scholars and
practitioners have persistently ignored developments in the Andean Community. There have
been –at best- two or three practitioners who have taken notice of the similarities.54 This is
53 Other kind of non-legal networks can also be found. See for instance, May 2003 Cartagena Declaration of the Andean Community in the context of the VIth EU-CAN High Level Dialogue on Drugs as well as the outcome of the April 2004 High Level Specialised Dialogue on Drugs held in Brussels 54 Among them Jose Carlos Mointinho de Almeida, former judge of the ECJ, and Jose Manuel Sobrino Heredia, former Referendaire, who by the way was a visiting professor at the Andean University Simon Bolivar.. See Mointinho de Almeida (1995) “El modelo comunitario europeo y su influencia en los procesos de integracion”, Jornadas sobre Integracion Economica y Derecho Comunitario Andino, Instituto de Estudios Juridicos del Estado Lara-Tribunal de Justicia del Acuerdo de Cartagen, Barquisimeto, Venezuela, p. 26-27; and Da Cruz Vilaca, Jose L. y Jose M. Sobrino Heredia (1996) “Del Pacto a la Comunidad Andina: el protocolo de Trujillo de
19
what makes it different from pure epistemic communities, which would have a strong interest
in knowing how new developments challenge their core beliefs, because “if confronted with
anomalies that undermined their causal beliefs, they would withdraw from the policy debate”
(Haas 1992:18). The ECJ-ACJ exchange could be labeled today as a case of weak
coordination (Zafonte and Sabatier 1998: 480).
That any possible epistemic link is unidirectional becomes also visible in relation to the
ordinary monitoring activities of the ECJ. The European Court of Justice publishes a review
"Reflets"55, in order to monitor the activities of judicial bodies related to regional integration,
and to inform the public rapidly of any new developments and interpretation of European law
in the European Community. Brief information on legal developments is disclosed, especially
in regard to its own jurisprudence, but also concerning national courts. A particular interesting
section of Reflets, is dedicated to European and international Jurisprudence, as well as
“practices of international organizations”. In the period between 1999 and 2009, the ECJ
highlighted the case law of 13 international and supranational dispute settlement bodies. The
Andean Court of Justice, however, is not mentioned once. This finding represents a challenge
for ordinary conceptions of networks, as the feedback toward the “leader” seems to be absent.
It is interesting to note though, that three MERCOSUR decisions are cited by Reflets, not
least because they make explicit references to European case law or noted European writers56
Table 1.
Notations published in “Reflets” about the activities of international courts
ECHR EFTA WTO ICLS MERCOSUR CPA UN ICJ UNCITRAL CEDAW ECOWAS CoE
31 26 12 4 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1
10 de marzo de 1996. Simple reforma institucional o profundizacion en la integracion subregional?, Gaceta Juridica de la CE y de la Competencia, p. 85-138. 55 <http://curia.europa.eu/jcms/jcms/Jo2_7063/reflets> 56 Arbitral Decision 28.04.99 Argentina/Brazil makes explicitly cites Robert Lecourt (1976) L’Europe des judges, Bruylant, Bruxelles. See Reflets No. 2/2000. Award No. 1/2005 of the Tribunal Permanente de Revisión cites case 320/03 Commission v. Austria, and case 463/01 Commission v. Germany; see Reflets No. 3/2007 p. 9
20
Conclusion
The data that has been collected so far with the help of the network approach, shows
that trans-regional networks indeed existed by the time of the transformation of the Andean
Pact and the incorporation of the ECJ model. These network play a role far more significant
than scholarship has assumed so far.
Contrary to accounts that assume complex decisions to be the product of intense
deliberation and bargaining, the establishment of the Andean Court of justice can be traced
back to a think tank and the organized work of a professional advocacy network: the INTAL-
Junta network. As the network began to expand, it was its core that commanded this
expansion toward the region that they best knew: Europe. As for the selection process,
although the network can be best characterized as an advocacy coalition, it resorted to the
epistemic asset that INTAL had been building from 1967 onwards. The evidence shows that
the participation of Pierre Pescatore and Maurice Lagrange was no accident. In addition, Felix
Peña, possibly the director of this orchestra was predominantly familiar with European
integration and European scholarship. This seems to suggest that the strategy was cost
avoiding, rather than legitimacy oriented to favor the European way vis-à-vis other ideas like
for instance, solutions that could have been advanced by American actors. For the same cost-
avoiding reason, the strategy sought to follow a working prototype rather than designing a
new dispute settlement system. The theory on advocacy coalitions is confirmed in its assertion
that it is much more decisive for policy outcomes to determine who gets to give advice. Once
the adviser has been chosen, the content will depend on actors’ background and socialization
and not on deliberation or coordination. In the case of the INTAL-Junta network, the
academic background of consultant Felix Peña was far more decisive than any meeting or
session that the Commission held.
The second claim is that this network also determined the action of the Andean Court
of Justice in its first years. The coordinated communicational strategy of the INTAL-Junta
network and the reception of the ECJ’s doctrine of direct effect and supremacy are closely
linked. Some judges even seem to have participated in some stages of the network. As for
those judges who joined later, like judge Piérola, it seems to be a case where newcomers face
liability pressure and tend to homogeneity; although this thought would require more
empirical evidence.
21
The graphic illustration of such a network shows that he is the hub that gathers an
epistemic sub-group, while Junta official Alberto Zelada is the second hub that influences the
judicial group. The INTAL-Junta network is bi-polar.
Finally, the evidence suggests that higher complexity problems, the search for
solutions becomes problemistic, increasing the chances of mimetic adoption of solutions. At
the same time, higher complexity of the proposed solution, decrease the possibility of political
scrutiny.
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